• Jeena
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    481 year ago

    In Germany we have the letter U but we call it by the real name “Kehrtwende”

  • @dystop
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    281 year ago

    The Romans must have called it a V-turn

  • Dandroid
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    1 year ago

    You should see the the folks in Beijing make a 欲-turn.

  • @bouh
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    101 year ago

    In French it’s called a pin turn.

    • @MrPoopyButthole
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      1 year ago

      I imagine that would be a hairpin which takes the shape of a U. In routing there is a hairpin NAT which redirects traffic exiting back into the local network.

  • @TheWonderfool
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    81 year ago

    Even though the letter U is definitely existing in the vocabulary, in Italian it is called “elbow turn” (curva a gomito)!

    • @Hazdaz
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      41 year ago

      Italian… “elbow turn”

      I’d be willing to bet that when they say elbow they mean the pasta.

      • @TheWonderfool
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        21 year ago

        Thank you for making me discover elbow pasta! It deepens my conviction that everything in Italy is somehow related to pasta…

      • @TheWonderfool
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        11 year ago

        Confusingly enough, in Italy I believe it is not quite a thing “elbow pasta”. Personally I have never heard anyone refer to any kind of pasta as “gomiti”, though Google showed me that they indeed exist. I have always heard the ones that looks like elbows in other names.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    My language doesn’t has U, but we call it U turn anyway, even though we have a similar letter in our own language.

  • @naux_gnaw
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    1 year ago

    In Chinese doing an u-turn can be called 掉头 or 调头, literal translation would be lose head (or front) or change head (front). For whatever reason apparently both can be used.

  • @mvirts
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    51 year ago

    But the symbol still makes sense

  • @over_clox
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    41 year ago

    You don’t need an alphabet to design what may as well be modern day hieroglyphics.

  • @suspecm
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    11 year ago

    The name U turn itself is dumb anyways (alongside shit like T-shirt, I kid you not I tought my english teacher was trolling us because I refused to believe at 12 that people in any part of the world use a ‘-’ in a regular word they use everyday).